The U.S. Army is raising its maximum recruitment age to 42 and removing restrictions for single marijuana convictions to ...
The new enlistment requirements were made official years after the Army faced a recruiting crisis, and as the United States ...
The U.S. Army officially raised its maximum military enlistment age to 42, aligning with the Air Force and Space Force.
The U.S. Army is expanding who can serve, raising the maximum enlistment age from 35 to 42 and dropping waiver requirements ...
The U.S. Army is raising the maximum enlistment age for eligible recruits from 35 years to 42, with the move set to go into ...
Rule change signals effort to widen recruitment pool after the Army previously failed to hit enlistment targets ...
The move is described as reflecting “changes in society,” but is widely seen as a response to persistent recruitment ...
The enlistment age will officially change from 35 to 42 specifically “for applicants with prior military service” on April 20 ...
The change comes as U.S. troops are in the Middle East to support the ongoing war against Iran.
The U.S. Army has raised the maximum enlistment age to 42 and also relaxed rules on recruting individuals with drug ...
The Army will now allow recruits to enlist up to age 42 and has removed a waiver requirement for those with a ...
The US Army is increasing its maximum enlistment age to 42. This change brings the Army in line with other military branches.